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Everything posted by tekobo
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As promised, here is a photo of the fish clamp in the 32. For UK folk who are interested, I bought it from : https://countryfirekitchen.com/products/turbot-clamp
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Cooked cos lettuce is a thing of beauty @Tyrus. Don't knock it until you've tried it! @tony b you should know better than to ask me about a beer bottle. I don't drink beer. I did buy that one for my husband from the same place I buy the Spanish Iberico pork: https://www.bascofinefoods.com/cerveza-er-boqueron/
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Great idea. I am sure this would be great with a bit of chicken thigh. In this case it was a veal escalope. In Germany they beat it so thin that you get a piece that covers your whole plate and is served with a nice dollop of potato salad. "Foreign" food is often best eaten in its home country but chicken fat did make my version taste good. No disrespect intended to chicken fried steaks, just a weird naming convention to get ones head around. @Poochie I had forgotten that KK folk are way too observant. What you spotted on my kitchen counter was this: We have packs all round the house. Our cats love these dried treats so much we call them kitty crack.
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Gosh. This just shows how insular I am. It didn't occur to me that people in other parts of the world don't eat turbot. Here in the UK it is seen as the king of fish and it is a special treat to have it in a restaurant. David is right in that it is smaller than halibut. I definitely agree that it has a more delicate texture. I often find halibut dry and turbot is more silky. Cooking it just so that the flesh slides as it flakes is a thing of joy.
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Non Americans like me find the concept of chicken fried steak just plain weird. That said, I had the chance to get my own back with this recipe. We have these really lovely chickens from Italy that drip a really lovely yellow fat when when they are being cooked. I collect it up and there it is in the bowl to the right in the picture below. My very own chicken fried schnitzel is actually fried in chicken schmaltz. Yay! The fixings in the big white bowl to the front are what you find in a Caesar salad, including anchovies. Schnitzel frying. I was going to grill the lettuce on the 16KK but it took too long to heat up and I ended up cooking it on a griddle in the IDK. Yummy salad. Super tasty chicken fried schnitzel and grilled Caesar salad. Making me hungry.
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I am mad about a couple of chefs in Wales - Nathan Davies of SY23 and Gareth Ward at Ynyshir. Gareth is my meat hero. My visit to his restaurant a couple of years ago and his subsequent feedback got me ageing a lump of sirloin for 198 days. It was delicious! I am now looking forward to visiting SY23 which is run by Nathan who used to work for Gareth. We rarely eat out because we can cook and eat and drink much better at home but I am sure that Nathan's restaurant will be worth the pilgrimage. He mentioned in an interview that the best thing on his menu is turbot cooked over fire, Basque style. I could not resist. I had a "spare" turbot in the freezer and so I hunted down the clamp that he uses to cook his. Here it is cooked over wood fire on my, sorry the Husband's, Argentinian barbecue. I don't like the fact that the wood burns with a lot of smoke in the Argentinian BBQ and so I burned the logs to embers in my Solo stove first and then transferred them to the Argentinian BBQ. First time trying that and it worked well. Cooked the sides in my 23 KK And ate at table with good friends the Dr and Mrs RokDok. It was soooo tasty. Nice smoky turbot, picked over by hand. Recipe? Didn't really use one but I took inspiration from Lennox Hastie and this recipe online: https://www.seriouseats.com/basque-style-grilled-whole-turbot Great to break away from treating turbot like a sacred piece of fish that can only be served on a fancy plate with a fancy sauce. The clamp is super good. Allows you to cook and turn the fish without sticking to the grate. Will take a pic of the clamp in the 32 in daylight so you can see how it fits. Hurrah.
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Hey @Poochie I feel your pain. I bought all sorts of books, tried different recipes and kept ending up with complete dough fails or sad looking pizzas. That is until @MacKenzie shared this pizza dough recipe: https://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1016230-robertas-pizza-dough Super simple. I mix it in my Kenwood Chef with the dough hook, leave to rest for four hours, shape and cook. Gave me confidence and tasted gooood. Good luck!
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what is this thing i just baked?
tekobo replied to David Chang's topic in Bread, Pizza, Pastries or Desserts
I am the exact opposite to you on this subject David. It seems a waste to me to heat up and heat soak a grill to the high temperatures for a bread cook and not finish off with a follow on cook but not the opposite way round. Residual heat from most cooks won't be enough and you will be burning up more fuel to get up to and hold the temps required for bread. All of that said, i can see from other threads that you are not new to the bread game and I am sure you will be teaching us some new tricks as you explore bread making with the KK. -
Welcome fellow black tiler! Looking forward to following your cooking journey and finding out how you find the KK compared to your Big Green Egg.
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Gosh, some really lovely looking cooks. I remember @Basher had a view about why your chickens were coming out with a colour gradient @Troble. No sign of that on your most recent cook. Did you work out a reason? @David Chang, I love your Indian meal. Laughed at the thought of you getting a 32 up those stairs of yours, hernia by hernia as you said when you hauled the 19 KK up with your mates. It may be that having two 19 KKs will work for you. For my part I like the flexibility of being able to run two grills at different temps for different parts of a meal.
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I think the 32 is the ideal size KK. You, @Gweesh, have hit the jackpot. Congratulations!
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I recognised Salt Lick from your photo @Troble. Here is mine from 2015. I did not have a KK then and didn't have much to compare the food with. I enjoyed the meal, liked the BYOB aspect and it was easier to get into than Franklins. Maybe next time I am in the US I will have the patience to wait in line to try their brisket.
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I like your thinking @skoell. Prost!
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@Poochie, I was puzzled by this when I first read it but I didn't get around to asking. Why did your KK come with the lid in a separate crate? Is that standard for the US/these days? So far I have had five KKs delivered and they all arrived with their lids on.
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Wow! What an entrance. KK baby delivered by Crane. Nice one. Also good that you already know that this won't be your last KK. Once you catch the bug there is no escape. Congratulations.
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That looks lovely @Poochie. I have not used my tagine in years. Since I got my KK I tend not to cook with covered dishes in the KK, on the basis that the KK lid is my cover. That said, the beauty of a tagine is meant to be the recirculation of the steam into the dish and your cook illustrates that nicely. One to try!
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Good to hear that you are on the mend. Getting a bout of COVID seems to be inevitable these days, particularly with small people around!
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Congratulations! Lovely, cheerful cobalt blue. Shame you went for pebbles but you are forgiven.
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Thoughts on the workings of charcoal and getting a perfect sear
tekobo replied to CeramicTool's topic in Komodo General
I am not retired so I need you folk to do the experimenting so I can benefit from your findings. Looking forward to the next instalment @CeramicTool. I don't have any pork chops to hand at the moment and so cannot try them out but they will be next on the list. That or a lamb chop. Both are fatty and prime candidates for testing this method. -
Lovely to hear from you Bruce. If I lived close by I would come round to play. I just know that you have every gadget going and I would be able to try before I succumbed and bought my own. Get grilling, you can't let all that lovely Dennis char go to waste. Think of all of us deprived Brits who can't get hold of it this side of the water!!
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Oh my!
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I keep coming back to this picture. Just the right level of cooking for me. Soft bread and some wasabi mayonnaise. Heaven.
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Longways Basket Splitter for the 32 KK
tekobo replied to tekobo's topic in KK Features & Accessories
I tried out a boned and rolled suckling pig on Sunday evening. There was much less smoke than normal and I managed to get good, crackly skin. Definitely a good way to do rotisserie of fatty meats on a KK. The black marks on the outside of the meat came from the wet stuffing that leaked from the inside of the piggy roll. Part of an Indonesian style meal. \ Gratuitous shot of my current obsession - madeleines. -
Be radical - start your own thread. Fire, fire!